Please don't judge me for borrowing Shakespeare's phraseology from Hamlet, that would make the rest of this post difficult to read. The text that I'm going to be preaching this Sunday is Luke 6:37-42; it begins with the phrase, "Do not judge". In the passage Jesus is warning us that the same way in which we judge, condemn, and/or forgive others will be the measure with which we ourselves are evaluated by God. That certainly is consistent with the teaching back in vs. 31 "do to others as you would have them do to you". Later in the passage Jesus explains that if we are trying to help others by pointing out to them the flaws in their own character (clearly something that needs to be done in humility) we must first remove the flaws in our own if we have any hope of seeing clearly.
As I write the sermon, I can't help but think about all of the judgments that I need to make each week to do my job. As a committee member for Mustard Seed Missions, we evaluate need/resources each week as new people are brought to our attention. How do we decide who we help and who we do not? As the pastor of this church I need to evaluate calls for assistance that we get every week, how do I decide who to help and who to not, and to what extent? I certainly also have to watch over this flock, to keep an eye out for troublesome behavior in this congregation and try to stamp it out for the benefit of the whole. Along those same lines, I need to be on the look-out for false doctrines and harmful ideas lest they take root amongst us and do harm to God's people.
It seems as if my job requires me to be a judge over a great many things and people, yet Jesus' words have to apply to me just like everyone else. In the end it all comes down to attitudes and the intentions behind our actions. Do I have the best interest of others and the needs of the community to heart? Are my decisions self-sacrificial or self-aggrandizing? The same questions apply to us all in the myriad of decisions (judgements) we must make each day as spouses, parents, consumers, voters, and members of the organizations we belong to. To remove ourselves from the equation (to not judge at all) would simply hand the decision over to those who have selfish goals in mind. To sit in judgment gleefully would be an affront to God and the speedy road to our own destruction.
Do you and I have to judge things in life? Of course, but we have no reason to be judgmental. Do we have to condemn evil and work towards its destruction? Certainly, but we have no reason to not hope for sinners to repent. Do we have forgive others? That is the most crucial question of all; if we fail to forgive, what hope have we when our own mistakes are brought into the light of day? Forgive, be merciful, and remember the embrace of your Heavenly Father when you finally returned home.
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